Old patient Flashcards

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1
Q

A geriatric patient appears to have soft wartlike skin lesions that appear “pasted on”. Mostly seen on the back and trunk. Benign. What is it?

A

Seborrheic Keratoses

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2
Q

A geriatric patient appears in the clinic. They appear to have bright, purple-colored patches with well-demarcated edges. Located on the extensor surfaces of the forearms and hands after a minor trauma. Lesions eventually resolve over several weeks, but residual brown appearance can occur when hemosiderin deposits in the tissue. Benign. What is it?

A

Senile Purpura

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3
Q

A geriatric patient appears in the clinic with tan- to brown-colored macules with a “moth-eaten” border on the dorsum of the hands and forearms caused by sun damage. More common in light-skinned individuals. Benign. What is this called?

A

Liverspots

Lentigines

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4
Q

A patient with a history of PVD appears in the clinic with dry and scaly, ulcerated, neovascularized, and bronzed (from hemosiderin deposition on the lower legs and ankles? What is this called?

A

Stasis Dermatitis

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5
Q

A geriatric patient appears in the clinic with flat or thickened plaque with color varying from skin-colored to red, white, or yellow. It appears scaly or have a horny surface and is found on sun-damaged skin. What is this called?

A

Actinic Keratosis (Solar Keratosis)

Condition is secondary to sun exposure and has the potential for malignancy. It is a precancerous form of squamous cell carcinoma.

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6
Q

A patient comes in the clinic with opaque grayish-to-white ring with a sharp outer border and an indistinct central border at the periphery of the cornea. What is the called? What do we need to monitor for?

A

Arcus Senilis (Corneal Arcus)

  • associated with contralateral carotid artery disease
  • Develops gradually and is not associated with visual changes
  • Caused by deposition of lipids.
  • *In patients younger than 40 years, can be a sign of elevated cholesterol. Check fasting lipid profile. **
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7
Q

A patient appears in the clinic with cloudiness and opacity of the lens of the eye(s) or its envelope. No red Reflex. The color of the lens is white to grey.

The patient reports gradual onset of decrease night vision, sensitivity to glare of car lights, halos around lights, blurry vision, and double vision.
What is it?

A

Cataracts

There are three types (nuclear, cortical, and posterior capsular).

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8
Q

You suspect glaucoma. How do you test for them?

A

Visual fields and tonometer

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9
Q

A geriatric patient comes into the clinic with loss of central visual fields results in loss of visual acuity and contrast sensitivity. Patient has drusen bodies. What is suspected? How to test for it?

A

Macular Degeneration

Amsler grid to evaluate central-vision changes

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10
Q

A patient is diagnosed with presbycusis?

What is it? What should be included in the education of this disease?

A

Sensorineural hearing loss

  • High-frequency hearing is lost first
  • Presbycusis starts at about age 50 years.
  • There are degenerative changes of the ossicles, fewer auditory neurons, and atrophy of the hair cells resulting in sensorineural hearing loss.
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11
Q

A patient appears to the clinic with tenesmus, rectal pain, and diminished-caliber stools (ribbonlike stools). What is suspected?

A

Rectal cancer

Refer to GI

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12
Q

An older patient presents with acute onset of severe eye pain, severe headache, and nausea and vomiting. The eye(s) is(are) reddened with profuse tearing. Complains of blurred vision and halos around lights. What is the plan of care? What is suspected?

A

Open Angle Closure Glaucoma

CALL 911 do not delay treatment
the ER will check IOP

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13
Q

When should the NP screen for lung cancer?

A

Patient with a history of smoking with the last 15 years and at the age of 55-80 years of age.

LDCT

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14
Q

A NP suspects lung cancer in a patient. What is the work-up?

A

Order chest radiograph (e.g., nodules, lesions with irregular borders, pleural effusion).
The next imaging exam needed is a CT scan.
Baseline labs include complete blood count (CBC), chemistry panel, liver enzymes, bilirubin, creatinine.

Refer patient to a pulmonologist for bronchoscopy and tumor biopsy.
Gold Standard DX: Lung biopsy

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15
Q

When should colorectal cancer be screen?

A

Start at age 50 years with baseline colonoscopy (repeat every 7–10 years; abnormal findings dictate more frequent evaluation),

Sigmoidoscopy (every 5 years)

A high-sensitivity fecal occult blood test (FOBT; annually).

A DNA-based screening FOBT (Cologuard) is now available in place of the screening colonoscopy, but it is only for average-risk individuals with no prior history of abnormal colonoscopy findings and/or no family history of colon cancer.

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16
Q

An older adult who presents with a change in bowel habits with hematochezia or melena and/or abdominal pain. The patient with unexplained iron-deficiency anemia. The patient may report anorexia and unintentional weight loss. Patients with rectal cancer can present with tenesmus, rectal pain, and diminished-caliber stool. What is the suspect dx?

A

colon cancer

GI referral

17
Q

What is multiple myeloma?

A

Cancer of the bone marrow that affects the plasma cells of the immune system (production of monoclonal immunoglobulins).

18
Q

What the cardinal s/s of multiple myeloma.

A
CRAB
Calcium increase
Renal insufficiency
Anemia
Bone Disease
19
Q

An older-to-elderly adult who complains of bone pain with generalized weakness. The bone pain located on the central skeleton (chest/back/shoulders/hips/pelvis), worsens with movement, and rarely occurs at night. The patient presents with anemia. What does the NP suspect or should rule out? What is the work up?

A

Suspect multiple myeloma.
Check for CRAB s/s
Work up include Baseline labs include CBC, FOBT, chemistry panel, and UA.

Refer patient to a hematologist.

20
Q

What lifestyle factors contribute to constipation?

A

Constipation are immobility, low-fiber diet, dehydration, milk intake, and ignoring the urge to have bowel movement.

21
Q

What medication can contribute to constipation?

A

Drugs that cause constipation are iron supplements, beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, antihistamines, anticholinergics, antipsychotics, opiates, and calcium-containing antacids.

22
Q

What is the treatment plan for constipation ?

A

Education and behavior modification (bowel retraining). Teach “toilet” hygiene such as going to the bathroom at the same time each day; advise not to ignore the urge to defecate.

Dietary changes such as eating dried prunes and/or drinking prune juice. Increase intake of fruit and vegetables.
Ingest bulk-forming fibers (25–35 g/day) once daily. Do not take with medication (will absorb drugs). Take with full glass of water (can cause intestinal obstruction).

Increase physical activity, especially walking.

Increase fluid intake to 8 to 10 glasses/day (if no contraindication).

Consider laxative treatment (Table 1). Avoid daily use of laxatives (except for fiber supplements) and chronic treatment with laxatives.

23
Q

The NP’s patient need bowel retraining. What is included in the education?

A

Choose time of the day patient prefers for bowel movements. Usually in mornings about 20 to 40 minutes after eating breakfast.

Spend about 10 to 15 minutes on the toilet each day at the same time. Avoid straining.

24
Q

What is the most common neurogenerative dementia?

A

The most common cause of neurodegenerative dementia in elderly is Alzheimer’s disease (60%–80%)

25
Q

What is the most common non-degenerative dementia?

A

The most common cause of non-neurodegenerative dementia is vascular dementia (CVA).

26
Q

A patient is suspected to have dementia. What is the initial workup to rule-out other diseases?

A

Ruling out secondary causes is done by ordering laboratory tests for syphilis, vitamin B12 deficiency, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), syphilis (only if high clinical suspicion based on sexual history or travel).

MRI is preferred over CT when scan of the brain is indicated.

27
Q

The nurse has to do a cognitive test. What is included on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE)

A

A brief screening exam to assess for cognitive impairment.

High sensitivity and specificity.

Score range is 0 to 10 (severe), 10 to 20 (moderate), 20 to 25 (mild), 25 to 30 (questionable significance; mild deficits).

28
Q

Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE): Perform test MMSE

A
  1. Orientation to time and place
    Ask about year/season/date/day/monthWhere are we now? Name state (county, town/city, hospital, floor)
  2. Short-term memory
    Name three unrelated objects and instruct the patient to recite all three words
3.  Attention and calculation
Serial 7s (ask the patient to count backward from 100 by sevens)
  1. Alternative: Instruct the patient to spell world backward
  2. Recall
    Say to the patient, “Earlier I told you the names of three things. Can you tell me what they were?”
  3. Language
    Show the patient two simple objects (e.g., pencil, coin); instruct patient to name them.Instruct the patient to repeat the phrase “No ifs, ands, or buts.”Give the patient one blank piece of paper. Instruct patient to “take the paper in your right hand, fold it in half, and put
    it on the floor.”Write on the paper “Close your eyes.” Instruct the patient to read and do what it says.
  4. Complex commands
    Writing a sentence: Instruct the patient to make up and write a sentence about anything.
    Copying a design: Use a questionnaire with a picture of two pentagons that intersect.
29
Q

A patient is experiencing delirium. What does the NP check for to find the cause?

A

Check Prescription medications (opioids, sedatives, hypnotics, antipsychotics, polypharmacy)

Check Substance abuse (alcohol, heroin, hallucinogens), plants (jimsonweed, salvia)

Cehck Drug–drug interactions, adverse reactions, psychiatric illness

Check for Abrupt drug withdrawal (alcohol, benzodiazepines, drugs)

Check Preexisting medical conditions, ICU patients with sensory overload

Cehck for Infections, sepsis (UTI and pneumonia most common infections)

Check Electrolyte imbalance, heart failure, renal failure

30
Q

What are the three A for Alzheimer’s?

A

Three As: Aphasia, apraxia, agnosia

Aphasia (difficulty expressing and understanding language)

Apraxia (difficulty with gross motor movements such as walking)

Agnosia (inability to recognize familiar people or objects)

31
Q

What’s the treatment for a MMSE 10–26 score?

A

Mild to moderate

Cholinesterase inhibitor drug class (increases longevity of acetylcholine)

Donepezil (Aricept), rivastigmine (Exelon), galantamine, or N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor agonist memantine (Namenda) PO daily to BID

32
Q

You patient scored MMSE <17 . What is the treatment plan?

A

Moderate-to-advanced dementia

Add memantine (10 mg BID) to cholinesterase inhibitor or use memantine alone.

33
Q

How to treat severe dementia?

A

Severe dementia (MMSE <10): Continue memantine or discontinue drug.

Improvement within 3 to 6 months. Stop if no longer effective.

34
Q

What are the s/s of Parkinson?

A

The classic three symptoms are tremor (worse at rest), muscular rigidity, and bradykinesia.

Parkinson’s dementia is common (up to 40%).

Depression is common (up to two-thirds of all patients).

35
Q

What is the first line drug for Parkinson Disease? What is included in the education?

A

first-line drug: Carbidopa–levodopa (Sinemet) TID (dopamine precursor)

Start at low doses. Sinemet 25/100 mg (half tablet) PO BID to TID with meal or snack to avoid nausea. Titrate up slowly to control symptoms.

Sudden withdrawal or dose reductions of levodopa or dopamine agonists (e.g., bromocriptine, ropinirole) may be associated (rarely) with akinetic crisis or parkinsonism-hyperpyrexia syndrome (fever, autonomic dysfunction, muscular rigidity, altered mental status).

Adverse effects: Motor fluctuations (wearing-off phenomenon), dyskinesia, dystonia, dizziness, somnolence, nausea, headache. Eventually will develop tardive dyskinesia (treat with benztropine, amantadine, others).

36
Q

Treatment for tardive dyskinesia (extrapyramidal symptoms) are the following:

A
Administer anticholinergics: Benztropine (Cogentin).
Administer amantadine (Symmetrel/Osmolex ER): Antiviral (treats type A influenza) and dopamine agonist.